The story moves along and proffers as much action as it possibly can in a story like this.The film “gets” so many things, including male friendships, European male friendships, religious European male friendships, religious European male friendships based on high ideals and working for the good of millions of people.He was engaged to Dot Rhone, actress Jane Asher, and married three times: to Linda Eastman, Heather Mills and Nancy Shevell.Mc Cartney had a three-year relationship with Dot Rhone in Liverpool, buying her a gold ring in Hamburg.They had three children together, and remained married until her death from breast cancer in 1998.

One of his many dilemmas in life was being Jewish Christian, with neither “side” seeming to fully accept him or his preferred dual-identity.

Jewish filmmaker, Ilan Duran Cohen, both Judaism and Catholicism (not an easy feat) and presents them with depth and sans one-dimensional cheesiness.

I was well aware of Lustiger while he was alive (and even have one of his books unread on my bookshelf), but didn’t really know much about his story. Lustiger and Wojtyla’s destinies are so intertwined in this film–as in life–and the actor who plays John Paul II really mastered the man, especially his mischievousness. is a bit of a recent history primer of sorts as well: the polarized Church in France, Poland and the Holocaust, Communism in Eastern Europe.

Bu how people meet the challenges in their life says a LOT about them. If they lounge around on fainting sofas waiting to have their brow mopped while you bring them a hot toddy and your check book — fuck ’em.

And don’t presume reciprocity (oh, of course they would) — watch what they do.

Choose a competent person with a job and their own money. Women fall for the caretaker role too — they jump in as “mommy” and polish the jerk up, find them employment, manage their life. Healthy people aren’t looking for parents and life coaches.